9/11 anniversary: Twenty years later
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Americans solemnly mark the 20th anniversary of 9/11 against backdrop of extraordinary political divisiveness.
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Los Angeles-area politicians Rep. Adam Schiff and Supervisor Hilda Solis reflect on the 20th anniversary of Sept. 11.
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Look through the post 9/11 archives of our staff photojournalists and read the stories behind each sliver of history
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A Los Angeles Times/Berkeley IGS poll found a majority of voters think post-9/11 security measures were justified, but a significant minority report being subjected to harassment.
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Every major TV network is airing programming this week to mark the 20th anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks. Here’s a viewing guide.
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A reporter remembers Sept. 11, 2001, when he was 8 years old, and examines how the terrorist attacks influenced his millennial generation.
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20 years ago, the news ticker became part of the TV viewing experience.
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Two decades after the 9/11 attacks, a reporter at Guantanamo reflects on the U.S. pursuit of justice and his quest to understand the perpetrators
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Twenty years after terrorists crashed hijacked planes into New York’s World Trade Center, the Pentagon and a field in Pennsylvania, the U.S. is still reckoning with the attack that toppled the twin towers, killed nearly 3,000 people, triggered a wave of increased security and launched a war on terrorism.
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About 7,050 men and women in uniform have died in the ‘forever war.’ But the largest percentage, 776 men and women, called the Golden State home.
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The Sept. 11 attacks linked U.S. immigration policy to the anti-terrorism strategy but also sparked a movement led by young immigrants.
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Eight U.S. politicians reflect on how Sept. 11 continues to influence their own lives and leadership.
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Kenny Necochea Jr., 21, was killed by suicide bomber in Kandahar in 2010. Almost 11 years later, the pain is still raw.
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What is a ‘9/11 novel,’ and what makes one endure? Rereading this micro-genre reconnects one critic to a time of terror, empathy and humanity.
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From ‘Shock and Awe’ to the death of Bin Laden, U.S. networks treated the war as a distant spectacle. Overseas, it was brutally, frightfully close.
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A generation of American Muslims has grown up in a world in which one terrible day changed their country. Visibility makes young women wearing hijabs especially vulnerable.